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I Predict a Graceful Expulsion

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (38 ratings)
I Predict a Graceful Expulsion album cover
01
The Mark
2:18
$1.29
02
Heavy Hands
2:29
$1.29
03
Winter Solstice
4:05
$1.29
04
When the City Lights Dim
3:20
$1.29
05
Hector
2:34
$1.29
06
Holland
3:49
$1.29
07
Elephant Head
4:13
$1.29
08
Send Your Youth
3:48
$1.29
09
Blank Maps
3:12
$1.29
10
Steady
4:01
$1.29
11
Lay Me Down
3:11
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 37:00

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eMusic Review 1

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Laura Studarus

eMusic Contributor

05.23.12
An extended dalliance with darkness
2012 | Label: MUTE

“Cross your heart and remember me, the good father and the bad seed,” London-based songstress Al Spx sings on the opening track of her debut, I Predict A Graceful Expulsion. A sea away from her Toronto, Canada, home, it’s difficult to believe that Spx — who refuses to use her real name out of respect for her God-fearing, disapproving family — is writing from a place of anything less than gut-wrenching sincerity.

Slung somewhere between Bill Callahan’s folk nihilism and Flannery O’Connor’s down and dirty spirituality, I Predict A Graceful Expulsion is an extended dalliance with darkness. As though weaving a gospel for the unbelieving, Spx fills her “doom soul” with tales of fractured families, weary travels, and what feels like emotional weight of the world. There’s some sparse, sophisticated, instrumentation — a single piano here, a strummed guitar there, a trumpeting horn from somewhere in the distance — but it all comes back to the barebones elegance of her emotive rasp. When Spx repeatedly sings, “I am a goddamn believer” over the chorus of “Blank Maps,” her voice growing to an unhinged howl, oh, how she’ll make you believe.

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Graceful explosion... of my brain

synaesthete

Holy hell, what a voice. I only just downloaded the album and am already in love.

user avatar

An extended dalliance with darkness

dekker45d

"emotive rasp" barely begins to describe her stop what you're doing and hear me-words ,emotions images, and flow forward visualizing possible future fates and a few scary gargoyles. That's what I hear and I am taking my meds

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eMusic Features

0

Interview: Cold Specks

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

[To celebrate the release of his 11th studio album, Innocents, we invited Moby to take control of eMusic's editorial for a week. You can read our exclusive interview with him here, and he also picked his 10 favorite albums on eMusic. We resurrected our interview with the Flaming Lips' Wayne Coyne, who sings on Innocents, and Moby requested an interview with one of the album's other guest vocalists, Cold Specks, which you can read below.… more »

3

eMusic’s #1 Album of 2012: Cold Specks’ I Predict a Graceful Expulsion

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

In concerts over the course of the last year Al Spx, the woman who writes, records and performs as Cold Specks, has been starting sets with an a cappella rendition of the old Elizabeth Cotten reel "Shake Sugaree." It's a sly, spooky little song, one where a lightness of melody distracts from a dark meaning. The song was written by Cotten, but the recorded version is sung by her great-granddaughter Brenda Evans, whose wide-eyed, angelic… more »

1

2012 Breakthrough: Cold Specks

By Elisa Bray, eMusic Contributor

[Of all of the records that came out this year, none captured our hearts as much as I Predict a Graceful Expulsion, the stirring, evocative debut from Al Spx, who records as Cold Specks. From the moment we heard it, we knew it was something truly special. Spx mastered the art of "sense language," writing words with no clear literal meaning, but with whole volumes of conveyed feeling. It is a poem of hope for… more »